When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Palmolive (brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palmolive_(brand)

    In just two years, Palmolive bar soap was the world's best-selling soap. Originally, Palmolive Soap marketing claimed the soap contained "Genuine Malaga (Spain) Olive Oil, the Oil of Palms, Glycerine, and the Oil of Lamb's Wool, Super-fatted with Cocoa Butter, the celebrated skin food". [6] By 1925, the olive oil was said to be "Italian".

  3. Savonor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Savonor

    At first the company bought palm oil from other companies and processed it to make soap. [2] Rafina uses cotton seeds from COGERCO to produce cottonseed oil and oilcake. [4] Byproducts are sold to Savonor. [5] As of 2024 Savonor had over 800 hectares (2,000 acres) of oil palms.

  4. Murphy Oil Soap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murphy_Oil_Soap

    Murphy Oil Soap is an American brand of cleaning product that is manufactured by Colgate-Palmolive. [1] In 1910, Jeremiah Murphy, director of the Phoenix Oil Company, bought the formula for Murphy Oil Soap from a recent immigrant from Germany. The soap, with its potassium vegetable oil base, and no phosphates, proved to be very popular in Ohio.

  5. Colgate-Palmolive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colgate-Palmolive

    In Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the B. J. Johnson Company was making a soap from palm oil and olive oil, the formula of which was developed by Burdett J. Johnson in 1898. The soap was popular enough to rename their company after it in 1917—Palmolive. [5] Around the start of the 20th century, Palmolive was the world's best-selling soap.

  6. Palm oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palm_oil

    Palm oil block showing the lighter color that results from boiling. Palm oil is an edible vegetable oil derived from the mesocarp (reddish pulp) of the fruit of oil palms. [1] The oil is used in food manufacturing, in beauty products, and as biofuel. Palm oil accounted for about 36% of global oils produced from oil crops in 2014. [2]

  7. Marseille soap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marseille_soap

    Today there are two main types of Marseille soap. The original greenish-hued variety made with olive oil, and a white one made of palm and coconut oil mixture. [2] Originally sold only in 5 kg (11 lb) and 20 kg (44 lb) blocks, they usually come in 300 g (11 oz) and 600 g (21 oz) squares nowadays.

  8. Sunlight (cleaning product) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunlight_(cleaning_product)

    Watson's process created a new soap, using glycerin and vegetable oils such as palm oil rather than tallow (animal fats). [4] William Lever and his brother James Darcy Lever invested in Watson's soap invention and its initial success came from offering bars of cut, wrapped, and branded soap in his father's grocery shop. This was an early labour ...

  9. Vegetable oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_oil

    Palm oil formed the basis of soap products, such as Lever Brothers' (now Unilever) "Sunlight", and B. J. Johnson Company's (now Colgate-Palmolive) "Palmolive," [8] and by around 1870, palm oil constituted the primary export of some West African countries. [9] In 1780, Carl Wilhelm Scheele demonstrated that fats were derived from glycerol.